Gov. Ron Desantis: we have the infrastructure to reduce covid-19 danger


 

It’s a DeSantis day, ain’t it? Fine with me, Mr. Future President. This time, it’s a different press conference from earlier today. Not the one where he destroyed Biden’s world. This time, it was the press he took to school.

They keep pressuring him over Covid restrictions and he’s not having it. Because the PEOPLE aren’t having it, and that is who he answers to. Not D.C. and not the wholly owned subsidiary of the Democrats we laughably call the press.

THE PEOPLE. And the people are tired of government trying to ruin our lives, destroy our businesses, and lock us indoors so they can do whatever evil plans they’ve cooked up in, all under the cover of “science.”

If science is about facts, then the facts are what matter, and the facts say that these restrictions HURT people. Which is exactly what Gov. DeSantis told the vultures.



Two different lawsuits have been filed against Gov. Ron DeSantis over his executive order on masks in schools.

They are the first legal challenges over the constitutionality of the governor's order on masks, attorneys working on the two suits said.
The order, issued late last month, directed the state's health and education departments to issue rules preventing the implementation of school mask mandates in an effort to "protect parents' freedom to choose whether their children wear masks."
One of the suits, filed by attorney Barry Silver, is on behalf of a father of three children living in Broward County. One of the children, who is too young to receive a Covid-19 shot, has a history of childhood asthma, the suit says.

"Florida is among the states with the highest number of Covid-19 victims in the country, and the number of afflicted people is growing rapidly. The danger to Plaintiff and his children and all others they come into contact with is severe, unreasonable, and growing by the day," the suit says.
The suit adds that the Florida Constitution says "adequate provision shall be made by law for a uniform, efficient, safe, secure, and high quality system of free public schools," and calls the governor's order unconstitutional.
The plaintiffs in the second lawsuit include parents who represent school-aged children from counties all over the state, including Miami-Dade, Orange, Hillsborough, Palm Beach and Alachua.
"They are framing this as a parent choice issue when this is really a public health issue," Charles Gallagher, an attorney working on that lawsuit, told Tranganhnam.xyz by phone.
The second lawsuit argues several points, according to Gallagher, including that the Florida Constitution guarantees a safe school environment and gives counties the power to govern themselves. DeSantis' executive order attempts to strip the power away from school districts that are run by elected officials, Gallagher said.
"The Constitution is equal justice under [the] law and therefore we think that we are on the right side of these facts," Gallagher said.
The lawsuits, filed Friday, come as Florida is quickly emerging as a dangerous Covid-19 hotspot.
Data published Friday by the state's health department shows Florida reported 134,506 new Covid-19 cases over the past week -- more than any other 7-day period during the pandemic. The previous record high was set January 8, when Florida reported 125,937 cases over seven days, according to Johns Hopkins University data.
And while the state accounts for less than 7% of the US population, about one in five Covid-19 cases nationwide have been reported in Florida over the past couple of weeks.
The state is also leading the nation in the number of adults and children admitted to hospitals with Covid-19, according to data published Thursday by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Despite the grim numbers, DeSantis has repeatedly doubled down on the fact that he does not want to allow schools to mandate masks for children -- even though many students still cannot get a Covid-19 shot. Children under 12 are ineligible for a vaccine.

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